People are going to see both of us and think it's an Abbott and Costello kind of thing. It's not an easy switch. It's not an easy transition from TV to film.
Sometimes you can do a TV show on a subject you just can't do in film. Either it's too long or studios will perceive it as not being commercial.
If you go back and look, a completely underrated film is 'Quest for Fire.' That was one of the most genius, simplistic but incredibly sophisticated notion of what it was. The evolution of that was just fantastic.
It would have been more obvious to go into film, based on the generation before me, but the generation before them were all composers or classical musicians.
Only after awhile. After it came out and people began to engage in discussions about the social reflections of the film that I realized it had an importance I hadn't thought of.
I'm in a position where I'm being continually knocked back for the kind of independent films I want to be in because people don't know who I am.
I always put in my 100 percent. Once the film is over, I look at my next, because then it's up to the audience to decide my fate.
It was not possible to film in California, because all the areas are heavily built up now. Coming to Cape Town is an invitation to step into the past and recreate Los Angeles of the 1930s.
Other actors like to rehearse on film-they like 30 or 40 takes. When you get an actor like that, it becomes difficult for me because I'm ready to quit after number two.
With film roles, it just has to be a character either I haven't done before, or a role with somebody really interesting or with an interesting person or group of people.
I'm like the king of the low-budget sequel. People ask, 'What film are you gonna do next?' 'I don't know, but it's probably got a 3 or 4 in the title.'
I'd been an actor in high school, and when I got to college, it was all about film.
A few performances have been left out of the various Woodstock soundtracks and film edits over the years, most notably The Grateful Dead.
It helps being from somewhere other than Hollywood, not having grown up with that sense of film-making. I really wasn't exposed to that as a young woman.
I will make myself sick on films, just because you want everything to be right. I can't sleep if something hasn't been done or is out of place.
An action film can have too much action; picture an equaliser on a stereo, with all the knobs pegged at 10. It becomes a cacophony and is, ultimately, quite boring.
In the midst of global recession, in the face of uncertainty about what's going to happen next, film looks for inspiration to real people.
I could never have imagined the films I've done and the people I've worked with when I was starting out; I certainly did not have a career path.
I think most of my films all have a certain tone or intensity in them. They are tense, and you kind of anticipate some kind of catastrophe, but you're not quite sure.
I will be making films, and I'm going to keep working, no matter what I have to do. And I don't plan to ever ask for permission from anybody.
How did I end up in films with people like Keira Knightley... all these beautiful leading ladies and me - it's kind of shocking.